Literary Gem: Success Oyeshola's 'Scars & Crowns' Reveals Its Secrets

The intricate journey of internal struggle often begins in childhood, as recounted by an individual who, at the tender age of six, mastered the art of swallowing a scream. This was not a deliberate lesson but a visceral realization that silence offered more protection than any cry. Consequently, quietude became a suffocating second skin, a constant lump in the throat, compelling a performance of normalcy even when inwardly fractured. Adults, oblivious to the internal turmoil, applauded this apparent strength and maturity, unaware that such resilience was often a symptom of deep-seated survival rather than genuine well-being.
This early conditioning led to a life characterized by profound contradictions: outward conformity and inner chaos. The individual became the quintessential 'trophy child,' praised for being 'good' and 'trouble-free,' yet this persona was merely fear woven into obedience. It was the vanishing act of a little girl, desperate not to be a burden, disappearing in plain sight. This ingrained pattern of suppression persisted into adulthood, transforming into 'high-functioning brokenness.' Externally, the individual became a pillar of strength, a source of guidance for others. Internally, however, the six-year-old self remained, holding its breath, praying for invisibility, while the world celebrated the polished, performing version—a version easier to commend, exploit, and profoundly misunderstand.
The insidious nature of unaddressed trauma convinces its bearer that their suffering is less valid than others, leading to a perpetuation of 'performing wellness' while privately decaying. Silence, often perceived as emptiness, was, in fact, a crowded space filled with shadows, unspoken grief, and rehearsed responses from a childhood steeped in unresolved pain. Yet, wounds, by their very nature, cannot remain silent indefinitely. They either find a voice or ultimately cause a breakdown. For the author, this breaking manifested gradually—forgetfulness, insomnia, irritability, and a disassociation from conversations, signaling a body desperately calling for help that the mouth refused to vocalize.
The initial act of speaking about this pain was fraught with trepidation, a trembling voice akin to a child's first steps. Sharing even a fragment felt like a profound betrayal of the long-held loyalty to silence. However, this act of honesty brought a crucial realization: speaking did not amplify the pain but rather stripped it of its secret power. Healing commenced not with a grand triumph, but with the simple admission of weariness from pretending. It involved acknowledging that strength devoid of rest is merely endurance cloaked in refinement, and bravely naming the very things once too terrifying to recall. Through this arduous process of unraveling, the abandoned child within the silence was finally rediscovered and embraced.
The creation of the memoir, titled 'Scars & Crowns,' was not an act of bravado but a wrestling match with truth itself. It was a painstaking endeavor, marked by tears between paragraphs and weeks of stepping away, as sealed chambers of the soul were reopened. This book is described not as sensationalism, but as a careful stitching together of memory, faith, and a slow-growing hope. Its genesis lies not in extraordinary pain, but in its profound familiarity, recognizing that countless individuals carry unlanguaged injuries, celebrated for surviving, yet limping behind their smiles. The memoir underscores the stark contrast between functioning through pain and truly breathing through healing.
The most heartbreaking aspect of chronic pain is its ability to normalize itself, leading to the confusion of numbness for clarity, and exhaustion for strength. Lives are often built around these fractures rather than addressing them. The memoir, therefore, represents a conscious decision to cease rehearsing survival. It is not a declaration of perfect wholeness but an articulation of 'becoming,' a sacred, ongoing process. Healing, it asserts, is far from a linear path, encompassing days of bleeding, days of breathing, and often, days of both. Ultimately, while silence may protect pain, honesty exposes it to the transformative power of possibility. 'Scars & Crowns' eschews the romanticization of suffering, instead focusing on the unwavering divine presence within it, and the unglamorous, diligent work of confronting one's past to reclaim the future, guided by grace. This is a universally human story, offering solace to anyone who has ever suppressed a scream, reminding them that breaking apart slowly, disguised as 'coping,' can lead to a gradual return to self, breath by breath, word by word, scar by scar, culminating in the profound truth that crowns are bestowed not upon perfection, but upon those who have endured the fire and still choose to rise.
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